An embattled Knicks’ coach is fired and one of the first — if not the first — name that comes to mind as a replacement is none other than Kentucky’s John Calipari.

We saw this scenario play out a year and a half ago when owner Jim Dolan canned Mike D’Antoni and Calipari, with his Creative Artists Agency ties — was touted as a possible savior.

The drumbeat grew so loud that Calipari was forced to Tweet a response.

“As I’ve said before, I have the greatest job in basketball at any level,” he Tweeted then. ”Why would I be interested in another job?”

He added: “I love being the coach of the commonwealth’s team. To that #BBN & all the recruits that are coming or want to come, I will be at Kentucky.”

Now here we are just 11 games into a disastrous start to the 2013-14 season, and D’Antoni’s replacement — Mike Woodson — already feels his seat growing hotter by the minute.

“I’m sure people are worried about it, I don’t want to see that happen,” J.R. Smith said Wednesday night at his locker when asked if he thinks Woodson is in danger of getting sent packing the way D’Antoni was.

After a tough 103-96 overtime loss to the Indiana Pacers, the Knicks are 3-8 (as are the Nets) as they head out on a four-game road trip that includes stops in Portland, Los Angeles for the Clippers and Denver.

“Me personally, I’m panicking,” said Smith, who is also repped by CAA. “I don’t want to be playing 3-8 basketball. I don’t want to play 50-50 basketball. If we are going to be a championship-caliber team and call ourselves that, we gotta play like that. There can’t be no other way.”

Calipari is again being mentioned for a possible return to the NBA, with one NBA executive telling Ken Berger of CBSSports.com that he could command $8 million per year and that Calipari’s guy William Wesley, aka “Worldwide Wes,” would ask for that.

Another executive told Berger of a potential Calipari return to the NBA: “He wants full control, bottom line.”

Yet another NBA executive told SNY.tv Wesley has the authority within CAA to make a Calipari arrival in New York happen.

“If that’s what Wes wants, that’s what they will do,” the executive said.

Of course, it’s hard to imagine Calipari walking away from Julius Randle and this loaded Kentucky team in the middle of a season in which the Wildcats can challenge for the coach’s second NCAA title in three years.

But could the Knicks make Herb Williams the interim coach for the remainder of this season and then go after Cal in the offseason, perhaps after Kentucky has reached another Final Four or captured another NCAA championship for BBN?

Sure, anything’s possible.

Let’s say Kentucky cuts down the nets in Arlington, TX on April 7.

At that point Calipari would have accomplished something only a handful of coaches have done by winning two NCAA titles.

Might it be time to return to the NBA at that point?

“John, at present rate, based upon numbers, is going in the Hall of Fame, assuming he stays in college basketball,” former UConn coach Jim Calhoun said in 2012, before Calipari won his first title.

“I don’t think he has to prove anything more in college basketball. If he got a very good NBA job, if that’s what he’d want to do. I personally don’t think he has to prove anything.”

Of course, Calipari, or whoever were to take over the Knicks, could be returning to a barren desert.

In a worst-case scenario, the Knicks miss the playoffs, or make it as the seventh or eighth seed and get bounced in the first round.

Does Carmelo Anthony, yet another CAA client, not only opt out, but head out of town as well?

“He is gone. This is it for him in New York City,” Stephen A. Smith said of Anthony Wednesday on SportsCenter.

About Adam Zagoria

Adam is a Basketball Insider for NBA.com and SNY.tv, where he covers basketball at all levels.

He is the author of two books, including "She's Got Handle," called "The 'Hoop Dreams' of the 21st Century" by The New York Times. His second book, "ULTIMATE: The First Four Decades," documents the colorful history of Ultimate Frisbee and was profiled in Sports Illustrated.

An award-winning journalist, his articles have appeared in ESPN The Magazine, Sports Illustrated, SLAM, Basketball Times and newspapers nationwide.

A veteran Ultimate player, Adam has competed in numerous World & National Championships, and his teams won the Westchester Summer League titles in 2011 & 2013.

He has also attended more Allman Brothers Band, Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen and Rolling Stones shows than he cares to remember.

Adam lives in Manhattan with his wife, Jennifer, and their children, Grace and James.